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      Nominate your UK invertebrate species of the year

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 2 April - 11:30

    Our natural history writer Patrick Barkham will make the case for 10 of our island’s best spineless wonders and we’re asking readers to nominate theirs

    Though we love to focus on the vertebrates, more than 95% of the world’s known living creatures – at least 1.3m species – are spineless. These amazingly diverse animals include insects (at least a million), arachnids, snails, crustaceans, corals, jellyfish, sponges and echinoderms.

    And now we want you to help us celebrate them.

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      EU pumps four times more money into farming animals than growing plants

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 15:00

    CAP scheme, which pays more to farms that occupy more land, drives ‘perverse outcomes for a food transition’, says study

    The EU has made polluting diets “artificially cheap” by pumping four times more money into farming animals than growing plants, research has found.

    More than 80% of the public money given to farmers through the EU’s common agriculture policy (CAP) went to animal products in 2013 despite the damage they do to society, according to a study in Nature Food . Factoring in animal feed doubled the subsidies that were embodied in a kilogram of beef, the meat with the biggest environmental footprint, from €0.71 to €1.42 (61p to £1.22).

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      The pet I’ll never forget: Tachypuss the cat, who hated being dressed up – but sensationally forgave me

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 10:00

    He was the perfect childhood companion, until he grew weary of wearing Al Capone and Lawrence of Arabia costumes. Then he went missing ...

    I grew up on a bleak and windy smallholding in Cornwall, deep in the Methodist farming hinterland between the Lizard and Land’s End. We had pigs, cows, geese and hens, dogs and cats, 13 acres and no money. Aged eight, I was told I could have my own kitten, and was taken to a tumble-down granite barn belonging to the sister of one of our neighbours. There I fell for a grey-green tabby. Taking him home that Saturday morning, I was the happiest girl in the world.

    During lunch a rat-a-tat-tat of potential names gunned out of my mouth in hope of my parents’ approval. Fluffy? Toffee ? Each met with gagging noises. Later I played with him as my parents watched the Ascot races on our tiny black-and-white TV. In the mix, running the Coventry Stakes, was a handsome bay called Tachypous (meaning “swift-foot” in Greek). My parents, lovers of Greek and Roman history, seized upon this, and before I knew it my kitten was called Tachypuss.

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      Nile crocodiles and Burmese python among rare species seized in Spain

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 31 March - 12:39

    Other endangered animals rescued in 2023 included a burrowing parrot, an African spurred tortoise and a blood-eared parakeet

    Specialist wildlife police in eastern Spain have rescued an exotic list of endangered animals over the past year, including a pair of Nile crocodiles, an African spurred tortoise weighing 25kg and a two-metre Burmese python.

    The Seprona division of the Guardia Civil said in a statement on Sunday that its officers had recovered “numerous examples” of species protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora during 2023.

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      Spinning, whirling fish in south Florida prompt emergency response

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 31 March - 11:00

    Smalltooth sawfish are behaving oddly, eliciting a first-ever plan to rescue and rehabilitate species from wild

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is launching what the agency described as an emergency response effort in south Florida after emerging reports of smalltooth sawfish spinning, whirling and displaying other abnormal behaviors.

    In a statement released last Wednesday, NOAA said that in addition to the abnormal behaviors, there have been reports of fish deaths in the lower Florida Keys, including more than 28 smalltooth sawfish as of 24 March.

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      Digested week: Germany has the right idea on dachshunds. Dogs should be cuddly | Lucy Mangan

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 29 March - 10:48


    Germans want to ban ‘torture breeding’ for extreme characteristics. Plus: don’t even think about swimming in British waters this Easter

    I’ll say this for the Germans: when they’re right, they’re so right. Word reaches us that dachshunds are to be banned in Germany.

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      Week in wildlife – in pictures: pedalo hijinks and a raccoon doing a handstand

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 29 March - 08:00


    The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

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      US National Park Service sued over plan to trap Puerto Rico’s famous stray cats

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 29 March - 01:20

    Activists say plan to remove 200 felines near Old San Juan fortress within six months is not enough time and worry cats will be killed

    A non-profit organization said Thursday that it sued the US National Park Service over a plan to remove Puerto Rico’s famous stray cats from a historic district in the US territory.

    The lawsuit filed by Maryland-based Alley Cat Allies comes four months after the federal agency announced it would contract an animal welfare organization to remove an estimated 200 cats that live in an area surrounding a historic seaside fortress in Old San Juan.

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      ‘We’d like to shoot them all’: growing army of wolfdogs raises hackles across Europe

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 06:00

    Experts say the hybrids risk ‘polluting’ the genetic stock, but scientists disagree on how to deal with them. In Piedmont, Italy, the sight of a blond wolfdog signals the risk of another new litter

    • Photographs by Alberto Olivero

    From the moment the rangers first saw him on their trail cameras, the problem was apparent. The wolf, spotted deep in the woods of Italy’s Gran Bosco di Salbertrand park, was not grey like his companion, but an unusual blond. His colouring indicated this was not a wolf at all, but a hybrid wolfdog – the first to be seen so far into Piedmont’s alpine region. And where one hybrid is found, more are sure to follow.

    “We thought he would go away,” says Elisa Ramassa, a park ranger in Gran Bosco who has tracked the local wolves for 25 years. “Unfortunately, he found a female who loves blonds.”

    Elisa Ramassa and fellow ranger Massimo Rosso search for wolf tracks in Gran Bosco di Salbertrand park

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